Agriculture is the backbone of Afghanistan’s economy. Eighty percent of the population is rural, and fifty percent live below the poverty line. The current food crisis has devastated Afghan families. Since March 2007, food prices have doubled. Land-rich Afghanistan has overtaken Iran to become the largest wheat importer in the region. Due to late spring rains and drought throughout the country, this year’s harvest outlook is bleak.

Investments in the agricultural sector and rural development will help to address three interlinked issues. They will:

provide incentives to farmers to shift back from poppy to food production;

create jobs in the rural areas to slow down rapid urbanization;

and encourage investment in hydropower to help address energy deficiencies.

The current food crisis should not come as a surprise and is a direct consequence of ill-considered international and national policies.

At the international level, the World Bank’s structural adjustment policies forced developing nations to stop supporting food-producing farmers. However, without such assistance farmers cannot survive and are pushed either out of the agricultural sector—or into poppy production.

Also, the Food and Agricultural Organization’s (FAO) early warning system is obviously ineffective for poor countries like Afghanistan. It does not allow enough lead-time for action. FAO‘s efforts to bolster food production in the developing world have been lacking, despite its statement that, “If assisted, Afghanistan could feed its population and avert the world food crises.” Finally, the push and persuasion of environmentalists for the use of bio-fuels has also added to the current crisis, because there is less land for and less investment in food crops, sending food prices even higher.

At the national level, insufficient and ineffective investment in the agricultural sector has accelerated the flight away from agriculture. Without basic infrastructural support, such as water irrigation systems, new technologies and better access to markets, food-producing farmers cannot recover their costs. In addition to ever-higher levels of poppy production, Afghans have suffered a declining food production, and increasing dependence on imported food. Worse, because there is no food reserve in Afghanistan, the government cannot intervene in the market to regulate food prices in the event of a crisis.

Long-term solution needed

The international actors in Afghanistan and the Afghan government should recognize that the agricultural sector requires more than a band-aid approach—the stability of Afghanistan and the region requires a long-term strategic approach to food security. Such an approach should contain three key elements:

First, increased agriculture production should be integrated with market and rural enterprise development in agro-processing and packing that meet the market standards, so thatfood can move swiftly and safely to market.

Second, agriculture productivity is directly linked with availability of water for irrigation, which in turn needs better management and proper infrastructure. Afghanistan needs to establish a national water authority to bring water related issues, policies and standards under a common strategic framework instead of delegating different parts to different ministries, creating confusion and competition. Considering the water shortage and increased demand for water from shared water sources, water could become one of the major sources of conflict in this region in decades to come. Investment in water infrastructure will not only bolster food production, but is also a conflict prevention measure.

Third, Afghanistan should establish a revolving fund that would enable the country to create a strategic food reserve through a private public sector partnership. The Afghan government needs the ability to regulate the food market through positive intervention — it needs to be able to buy up surplus food in times of abundance, and supply the market with food stuffs in times of soaring food prices. There are many examples where large harvests harmed Afghan farmers by yielding low prices.

Without immediate intervention and long-term action by the government of Afghanistan and the international community, the crisis could push the country into a cycle of criminality, theft and insecurity which would further strain already fragile stabilization and reconstruction efforts.